Research Snappy
  • Market Research Forum
  • Investment Research
  • Consumer Research
  • More
    • Advertising Research
    • Healthcare Research
    • Data Analysis
    • Top Companies
    • Latest News
No Result
View All Result
Research Snappy
No Result
View All Result

Doorway Study Reveals How Anorexia Changes ‘Body Awareness’ – Consumer Health News

researchsnappy by researchsnappy
January 19, 2021
in Consumer Research
0
Doorway Study Reveals How Anorexia Changes ‘Body Awareness’ – Consumer Health News
399
SHARES
2.3k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

WEDNESDAY, Jan. 20, 2021 (HealthDay News) — A study that examined how people walked through doorways provides new insight into anorexia’s effect on a person’s body image.

It’s long been known that people with anorexia overestimate their body size, but this study examined unconscious body awareness — formally called “body schema.” It’s the innate ability a person has to orient themselves in a room and stop from bumping into objects. Body schema usually adapts to wherever a person happens to be,. but the new study found that it might not be as adaptable in people with anorexia.

The researchers, at Ruhr University Bochum, in Germany, conducted an experiment with 23 people with anorexia and a control group of 23 people without the eating disorder. The participants were asked to pass through door frames of different widths, but weren’t told that was the actual focus of the study.

“The [door] opening was adapted to the shoulder width of the subjects and varied between 0.9 times and 1.45 times this width,” said study leader Martin Diers, a research professor of neuroscience.

Participants with anorexia turned their shoulders to the side with much wider doors than those in the control group, according to the report published online recently in the International Journal of Eating Disorders.

Lead author Nina Beckmann said, “This shows us that they also unconsciously assess their proportions to be larger than they actually are.”

The tendency of people with anorexia to turn their shoulders at wider door widths was also accompanied by negative feelings about their body, as revealed by their responses to questionnaires from the researchers.

A combination of virtual reality and cognitive behavioral therapy may help people with anorexia overcome their distorted body schema, the authors suggested in a university news release.

More information

The U.S. Office on Women’s Health has more on anorexia.

SOURCE: Ruhr University Bochum, news release, Jan. 12, 2021

Previous Post

The Little-Known Tech That Could Transform Healthcare

Next Post

RenovaCare to Present at Noble Capital Markets Annual Investor Conference on January 19, 2021

Next Post
Edison Issues Outlook on AFT Pharmaceuticals (AFT)

RenovaCare to Present at Noble Capital Markets Annual Investor Conference on January 19, 2021

Research Snappy

Category

  • Advertising Research
  • Consumer Research
  • Data Analysis
  • Healthcare Research
  • Investment Research
  • News

After A Delay, AquaBounty’s GMO Salmon Available To U.S. Consumers In April

Zoom Video Stock Zooms Higher as Earnings Again Top Estimates

Hanover School Board debating changes to IB program

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • Antispam
  • DMCA
  • Contact Us

© 2021 researchsnappy.com

No Result
View All Result
  • Market Research Forum
  • Investment Research
  • Consumer Research
  • More
    • Advertising Research
    • Healthcare Research
    • Data Analysis
    • Top Companies
    • Latest News

© 2021 researchsnappy.com